Taking Stock – Race Equality in Scotland

Taking Stock – Race Equality in Scotland

Runnymede Perspectives Taking Stock Race Equality in Scotland Edited by Nasar Meer, Smina Akhtar and Neil Davidson Runnymede: Intelligence Disclaimer This publication is part of the Runnymede Perspectives for a Multi-ethnic Britain series, the aim of which is to foment free and exploratory thinking on race, ethnicity and equality. The facts presented and views expressed in this publication are, however, those Runnymede is the UK’s of the individual authors and not necessariliy those of the leading independent thinktank Runnymede Trust. on race equality and race relations. Through high- ISBN: 978-1-909546-31-8 quality research and thought Published by Runnymede in May 2020, this document is leadership, we: copyright © Runnymede 2020. Some rights reserved. • Identify barriers to race Open access. Some rights reserved. The Runnymede Trust wants to encourage the circulation of equality and good race its work as widely as possible while retaining the copyright. relations; The trust has an open access policy which enables anyone • Provide evidence to to access its content online without charge. Anyone can download, save, perform or distribute this work in any support action for social format, including translation, without written permission. change; This is subject to the terms of the Creative Commons • Influence policy at all Licence Deed: Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales. Its main conditions are: levels. • You are free to copy, distribute, display and perform the work; • You must give the original author credit; • You may not use this work for commercial purposes; • You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work. You are welcome to ask Runnymede for permission to use this work for purposes other than those covered by the licence. Runnymede is grateful to Creative Commons for its work and its approach to copyright. For more information please go to www.creativecommons.org Runnymede Unit 119 Pill Box 115 Coventry Road London E2 6GG T 020 7377 9222 E [email protected] www.runnymedetrust.org Contents List of Contributors 3 Introduction: Taking Stock 4 Nasar Meer, Smina Akhtar and Neil Davidson Lessons Learnt about ‘Race’ in Scotland 8 Rowena Arshad Scottish Public Sector Equality Duties: Making ‘Good Practice’ Count 11 Carol Young Race, Equality and Human Rights in Scotland 15 Danny Boyle The Opportunities and Obstacles for a ‘Scottish Approach’ to 19 Race Equality Nasar Meer Different but Similar? BAME Groups and the Impacts of Covid-19 22 in Scotland Kaveri Qureshi, Nasar Meer and Sarah Hill Conversations about Racism and Whiteness Are Missing within 25 Education in Scotland Khadija Mohammed Addressing the Absences in Teaching Scotland’s Slavery Past 29 Stephen Mullen An Agenda for Change 33 Anas Sarwar Diverse but Marginalised 36 Fulton MacGregor Choose Hope Not Hate: Scottish Green Party Policy and Action 39 on Race Equality Gillian Wilson Appendix I: Self-Reported Discrimination in Scotland, 2015–2019 41 Nasar Meer 2 Runnymede Perspectives In the course of producing this report our friend and co-editor Neil Davidson sadly passed away. We will continue to honour his memory by struggling against racism and pursuing a more just and equality society. Taking Stock: Race Equality in Scotland 3 List of Contributors Smina Akhtar is a PhD researcher at the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow. Rowena Arshad was formerly Head of the University of Edinburgh's Moray House School of Education and Sport. She is an associate of the Centre for Education for Racial Equality in Scotland (CERES). Danny Boyle is Parliamentary and Policy Officer with national equalities organisation BEMIS Scotland. Neil Davidson is a lecturer at the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow. Khadija Hussein is a senior lecturer in education in the School of Education and Social Sciences, University of the West of Scotland. She is also the co-founder and chair of the Scottish Association of Minority Ethnic Educators (SAMEE). Fulton McGregor is Member of the Scottish Parliament for Coatbridge and Chryston and Convener of the Cross-Party Group on Racial Equality. Nasar Meer is Professor of Race, Identity and Citizenship at the University of Edinburgh, a Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE) Research Fellow and Director of RACE.ED. Stephen Mullen is a historian of slavery in the British-Atlantic world and is currently based at the University of Glasgow. Anas Sarwar is Chair of the Cross-Party Group on Tackling Islamophobia and Member of the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow. Gillian Wilson is a member of the Scottish Green Party in Edinburgh. Carol Young is Senior Policy Officer for the Coalition for Racial Equality and Rights. Kaveri Qureshi is a Lecturer in Global Health Equity at the University of Edinburgh Sarah Hill PhD is a Senior Lecturer in the Global Health Policy Unit at the University of Edinburgh 4 Runnymede Perspectives Introduction: Taking Stock Nasar Meer, Smina Akhtar and Neil Davidson In 2016, we published Scotland and Race Equality: under-representation among such groups. Among Directions in Policy and Identity, which drew together this multi-stranded configuration, codified to some leading researchers and policy actors to understand extent in the Equality Act 2010, approaches to race and evaluate recent developments in race equality in equality have also developed what Hepple (2011) Scotland. This follow-up report builds on the earlier calls an ‘unsettled apparatus’. This is carried into publication but also draws on evidence presented the legislative instruments of devolved government, at the conference event ‘Tackling Scotland’s Racism specifically in Schedule 5 of the Scotland Act 1998, Problem’ held on 10 May 2019. The conference was which incorporated the functions of the third Race focused on policy solutions and brought together Relations Act (1976). Here, Paragraph L2 of Part 11 practitioners, activists and politicians. This report of Schedule 5 specifies that ‘equal opportunities’ includes contributions from MSPs (members of the is a reserved matter, and that this includes ‘the Scottish Parliament), stakeholders and researchers, subject matter of the Equal Pay Act 1970, the Sex and is presented as a further and necessary check Discrimination Act 1975, the Race Relations Act on how Scotland’s race equality agenda is developing 1976 and the Disability Discrimination Act 1995’. and where it may be headed in the years to come. An evolving story Since devolution, the Scottish Government has The timing is appropriate. It is over 20 years since put forward a number of initiatives that deal with devolution, and the fate of race equality as a public race equality, including: policy area has fluctuated during this period, with observers noting that while the first two sessions of 2002 The Scottish Executive’s anti-racism the Scottish Parliament saw debates on anti-racism, campaign there were no chamber debates on either the Race Equality Statement 2008–2011 or the Race Equality 2005 The Scottish Executive’s race Framework for Scotland 2016–2030 (CRER, 2019). equality scheme Yet the topic of anti-racism (broadly conceived) has assumed a tacit role within Scottish political 2006 The Scottish Executive’s national discourse well beyond the Scottish Parliament during strategy and action plan on race this period, and not least in the ways in which some equality political actors have argued mark Scotland out as different from the UK as a whole (Davidson et al., 2008 The Scottish Government’s Race 2018). Moreover, in 2015 the Scottish Government Equality Statement published initiated a wide-ranging consultation in advance of introducing the new race equality framework, 2012 Public Sector Equality Duty Scottish something that goes well beyond anything previously specific duties published (new attempted in Scotland (Scottish Government, 2016). specific duties for listed public Not unrelated to the first two issues, the multi-level bodies to help them meet the character of governance in the UK means that there Equality Act 2010 general duty) may be race equality policy developments in this evolving story that are missed from a UK perspective. 2016 Scottish Government’s Race Equality Framework for Scotland published Scotland, as with the UK as a whole, has formally 2017 A Fairer Scotland for All: Race understood tackling discrimination as something equality action plan and highlight ‘active’ in seeking to treat people equally rather report 2017–2021 published than resting on a benign ideal of equal treatment. In theory at least, this reaches beyond how different 2020 Scottish Government announces the groups might blend into society, and instead insists creation of a new Directorate of on group-specific policy to address discrimination Equality, Inclusion and Human Rights based on gender, disability, age, sexual orientation and so forth, as well as monitoring the institutional Taking Stock: Race Equality in Scotland 5 Under the devolution settlement, therefore, the attempts to recognise institutional racism, Police legislative foundation of race equality is reserved to Scotland has not. Indeed, it took 18 years of Westminster. campaigning by the civil rights lawyer Aamer Anwar, as well as a change in the law, for the police and The multi-level character of this settlement is key. judicial system to prosecute the killers of Surjit Singh It has been argued that it is precisely because Chhokar. More recently, the family of Sheku Bayou race equality policy is a reserved matter that it has have waited almost five years to get an explanation been able to be ‘left off’ the agenda in Scotland for why Sheku died at the hands of the police. As (Arshad, 2016). This is a complaint not about the with deaths in police custody in England, questions lack of legislation but about the absence of both have been raised about the amount of force used a cultural awareness around race equality and a on Sheku, in addition to the lack of independence policy commitment to operationalise it.

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